I had been meaning to read Llewellyn's Sabbat Essentials collection for a while now, and happened to come across the Samhain one a week before the holiday so I picked it up. Overall, what a gorgeous little book! I read it in a couple of days but felt so much information was included, in a very digestible way. First the good things:
- Layout and design: the book is easily laid out into logical sections and the illustrations are beautiful
- Acknowledgement of the Southern Hemisphere: THANK YOU Diana for acknowledging those of us practising under a southern sky! The very first few pages shows the Wheel of the Year in both the southern and northern versions, and explains how seasons differ and how many make their own wheel of the year celebrations depending on the climate they live in. Even at the end of the book, she includes a list of other celebrations happening during Samhain in the Southern Hemisphere, and I was really touched to see ANZAC day included.
- Historical Information: Good to see a thorough reference list and very interesting section on the history of Halloween/Samhain and the different cultures and religions who celebrate this Festival of the Dead. You don't even have to be Pagan to enjoy this section, I think many would be interested in the origins of Jack O Lanterns and dressing up as monsters. Plus, I liked the good Pagan history - the author acknowledges that the Pagan Wheel of the Year was only formalised in the 1940s and 1950s - no inaccurate 'Wicca is a religion that was actually practised for hundreds of years pre-Christianity' myth that was ubiquitous in Pagan texts of the 1980s and 1990s.
- Ideas for celebrating Samhain - there is just SO much here. So many ideas for foods, crafts, rituals and celebrations, suitable for all levels and whether you are celebrating solitary, in a couple of a group. There's a whole section of additional reading as well.
For the negatives.... honestly, I can't think of many! The only improvement I would make in the book, is to include a section on Gods & Goddesses for Samhain. There is a prayer section that offers a number of prayers and songs to various deities, but I didn't know why some were included - I don't know Egyptian mythology well enough to understand why Anubis would be considered suitable for Samhain for example. I would have included one more section that listed these gods and goddesses, plus included a short paragraph about who they are and their mythology/how that myth relates to Samhain.
However, that really is a small negative in what is overall a lovely and well-thought out book! I look forward to reading the other books in the series.